IN WHICH A PRINCESS LEAVES A DARK TOWER AND A PROVISION MERCHANT RETURNS TO HIS FAMILY
The three days of storm ended in the
night, and with the wild weather there departed from
the Cruives something which had weighed on Dickson’s
spirits since he first saw the place. Monday only
a week from the morning when he had conceived his
plan of holiday saw the return of the sun
and the bland airs of spring. Beyond the blue
of the yet restless waters rose dim mountains tipped
with snow, like some Mediterranean seascape.
Nesting birds were busy on the Laver banks and in
the Huntingtower thickets; the village smoked peacefully
to the clear skies; even the House looked cheerful
if dishevelled. The Garple Dean was a garden
of swaying larches, linnets, and wild anemones.
Assuredly, thought Dickson, there had come a mighty
change in the countryside, and he meditated a future
discourse to the Literary Society of the Guthrie Memorial
Kirk on “Natural Beauty in Relation to the Mind
of Man.”
It remains for the chronicler to gather
up the loose ends of his tale. There was no newspaper
story with bold headlines of this the most recent
assault on the shores of Britain. Alexis Nicholaevitch,
once a Prince of Muscovy and now Mr. Alexander Nicholson
of the rising firm of Sprot and Nicholson of Melbourne,
had interest enough to prevent it. For it was
clear that if Saskia was to be saved from persecution,
her enemies must disappear without trace from the
world, and no story be told of the wild venture which
was their undoing. The constabulary of Carrick
and Scotland Yard were indisposed to ask questions,
under a hint from their superiors, the more so as
no serious damage had been done to the persons of
His Majesty’s lièges, and no lives had been
lost except by the violence of Nature. The Procurator-Fiscal
investigated the case of the drowned men, and reported
that so many foreign sailors, names and origins unknown,
had perished in attempting to return to their ship
at the Garplefoot. The Danish brig had vanished
into the mist of the northern seas. But one
signal calamity the Procurator-Fiscal had to record.
The body of Loudon the factor was found on the Monday
morning below the cliffs, his neck broken by a fall.
In the darkness and confusion he must have tried to
escape in that direction, and he had chosen an impracticable
road or had slipped on the edge. It was returned
as “death by misadventure,” and the Carrick
Herald and the Auchenlochan advertiser
excelled themselves in eulogy. Mr. Loudon, they
said, had been widely known in the south-west of Scotland
as an able and trusted lawyer, an assiduous public
servant, and not least as a good sportsman.
It was the last trait which had led to his death,
for, in his enthusiasm for wild nature, he had been
studying bird life on the cliffs of the Cruives during
the storm, and had made that fatal slip which had
deprived the shire of a wise counsellor and the best
of good fellows.
The tinklers of the Garplefoot took
themselves off, and where they may now be pursuing
their devious courses is unknown to the chronicler.
Dobson, too, disappeared, for he was not among the
dead from the boats. He knew the neighbourhood,
and probably made his way to some port from which
he took passage to one or other of those foreign lands
which had formerly been honoured by his patronage.
Nor did all the Russians perish. Three were
found skulking next morning in the woods, starving
and ignorant of any tongue but their own, and five
more came ashore much battered but alive. Alexis
took charge of the eight survivors, and arranged to
pay their passage to one of the British Dominions and
to give them a start in a new life. They were
broken creatures, with the dazed look of lost animals,
and four of them had been peasants in Saskia’s
estates. Alexis spoke to them in their own language.
“In my grandfather’s time,” he
said, “you were serfs. Then there came
a change, and for some time you were free men.
Now you have slipped back into being slaves again the
worst of slaveries, for you have been the serfs of
fools and scoundrels and the black passion of your
own hearts. I give you a chance of becoming free
men once more. You have the task before you
of working out your own salvation. Go, and God
be with you.”
Before we take leave of these companions
of a single week I would present them to you again
as they appeared on a certain sunny afternoon when
the episode of Huntingtower was on the eve of closing.
First we see Saskia and Alexis walking on the thymy
sward of the cliff-top, looking out to the fretted
blue of the sea. It is a fitting place for lovers above
all for lovers who have turned the page on a dark
preface, and have before them still the long bright
volume of life. The girl has her arm linked in
the man’s, but as they walk she breaks often
away from him, to dart into copses, to gather flowers,
or to peer over the brink where the gulls wheel and
oyster-catchers pipe among the shingle. She is
no more the tragic muse of the past week, but a laughing
child again, full of snatches of song, her eyes bright
with expectation. They talk of the new world
which lies before them, and her voice is happy.
Then her brows contract, and, as she flings herself
down on a patch of young heather, her air is thoughtful.
“I have been back among fairy
tales,” she says. “I do not quite
understand, Alesha. Those gallant little boys!
They are youth, and youth is always full of strangeness.
Mr. Heritage! He is youth, too, and poetry,
perhaps, and a soldier’s tradition. I think
I know him.... But what about Dickson?
He is the Petit bourgeois, the epicier,
the class which the world ridicules. He is unbelievable.
The others with good fortune I might find elsewhere in
Russia perhaps. But not Dickson.”
“No,” is the answer.
“You will not find him in Russia. He is
what they call the middle-class, which we who were
foolish used to laugh at. But he is the stuff
which above all others makes a great people. He
will endure when aristocracies crack and proletariats
crumble. In our own land we have never known
him, but till we create him our land will not be a
nation.”
Half a mile away on the edge of the
Laver glen Dickson and Heritage are together, Dickson
placidly smoking on a tree-stump and Heritage walking
excitedly about and cutting with his stick at the bracken.
Sundry bandages and strips of sticking plaster still
adorn the Poet, but his clothes have been tidied up
by Mrs. Morran, and he has recovered something of
his old precision of garb. The eyes of both are
fixed on the two figures on the cliff-top. Dickson
feels acutely uneasy. It is the first time that
he has been alone with Heritage since the arrival
of Alexis shivered the Poet’s dream. He
looks to see a tragic grief; to his amazement he beholds
something very like exultation.
“The trouble with you, Dogson,”
says Heritage, “is that you’re a bit of
an anarchist. All you false romantics are.
You don’t see the extraordinary beauty of the
conventions which time has consecrated. You always
want novelty, you know, and the novel is usually the
ugly and rarely the true. I am for romance,
but upon the old, noble classic line.”
Dickson is scarcely listening.
His eyes are on the distant lovers, and he longs
to say something which will gently and graciously express
his sympathy with his friend.
“I’m afraid,” he
begins hesitatingly, “I’m afraid you’ve
had a bad blow, Mr. Heritage. You’re taking
it awful well, and I honour you for it.”
The Poet flings back his head.
“I am reconciled,” he says. “After
all ’tis better to have loved and lost, you
know. It has been a great experience and has
shown me my own heart. I love her, I shall always
love her, but I realize that she was never meant for
me. Thank God I’ve been able to serve
her that is all a moth can ask of a star.
I’m a better man for it, Dogson. She will
be a glorious memory, and Lord! what poetry I shall
write! I give her up joyfully, for she has found
her mate. ’Let us not to the marriage of
true minds admit impediments!’ The thing’s
too perfect to grieve about.... Look! There
is romance incarnate.”
He points to the figures now silhouetted
against the further sea. “How does it go,
Dogson?” he cries. “’And on her
lover’s arm she leant’ what
next? You know the thing.”
Dickson assists and Heritage declaims:
“And on her lover’s arm she
leant,
And round her waist she felt
it fold,
And far across the hills they went
In that new world which is
the old:
Across the hills, and far away
Beyond their utmost purple
rim,
And deep into the dying day
The happy princess followed
him.”
He repeats the last two lines twice
and draws a deep breath. “How right!”
he cries. “How absolutely right!
Lord! It’s astonishing how that old bird
Tennyson got the goods!”
After that Dickson leaves him and
wanders among the thickets on the edge of the Huntingtower
policies above the Laver glen. He feels childishly
happy, wonderfully young, and at the same time supernaturally
wise. Sometimes he thinks the past week has been
a dream, till he touches the sticking-plaster on his
brow, and finds that his left thigh is still a mass
of bruises and that his right leg is woefully stiff.
With that the past becomes very real again, and he
sees the Garple Dean in that stormy afternoon, he wrestles
again at midnight in the dark House, he stands with
quaking heart by the boats to cut off the retreat.
He sees it all, but without terror in the recollection,
rather with gusto and a modest pride. “I’ve
surely had a remarkable time,” he tells himself,
and then Romance, the goddess whom he has worshipped
so long, marries that furious week with the idyllic.
He is supremely content, for he knows that in his humble
way he has not been found wanting. Once more
for him the Chavender or Chub, and long dreams among
summer hills. His mind flies to the days ahead
of him, when he will go wandering with his pack in
many green places. Happy days they will be,
the prospect with which he has always charmed his
mind. Yes, but they will be different from what
he had fancied, for he is another man than the complacent
little fellow who set out a week ago on his travels.
He has now assurance of himself, assurance of his
faith. Romance, he sees, is one and indivisible....
Below him by the edge of the stream
he sees the encampment of the Gorbals Die-Hards.
He calls and waves a hand, and his signal is answered.
It seems to be washing day, for some scanty and tattered
raiment is drying on the sward. The band is evidently
in session, for it is sitting in a circle, deep in
talk.
As he looks at the ancient tents,
the humble equipment, the ring of small shockheads,
a great tenderness comes over him. The Die-Hards
are so tiny, so poor, so pitifully handicapped, and
yet so bold in their meagreness. Not one of
them has had anything that might be called a chance.
Their few years have been spent in kennels and closes,
always hungry and hunted, with none to care for them;
their childish ears have been habituated to every
coarseness, their small minds filled with the desperate
shifts of living.... And yet, what a heavenly
spark was in them! He had always thought nobly
of the soul; now he wants to get on his knees before
the queer greatness of humanity.
A figure disengages itself from the
group, and Dougal makes his way up the hill towards
him. The Chieftain is not more reputable in garb
than when we first saw him, nor is he more cheerful
of countenance. He has one arm in a sling made
out of his neckerchief, and his scraggy little throat
rises bare from his voluminous shirt. All that
can be said for him is that he is appreciably cleaner.
He comes to a standstill and salutes with a special
formality.
“Dougal,” says Dickson,
“I’ve been thinking. You’re
the grandest lot of wee laddies I ever heard tell
of, and, forbye, you’ve saved my life.
Now, I’m getting on in years, though you’ll
admit that I’m not that dead old, and I’m
not a poor man, and I haven’t chick or child
to look after. None of you has ever had a proper
chance or been right fed or educated or taken care
of. I’ve just the one thing to say to you.
From now on you’re my bairns, every one of you.
You’re fine laddies, and I’m going to
see that you turn into fine men. There’s
the stuff in you to make Generals and Provosts ay,
and Prime Ministers, and Dod! it’ll not be my
blame if it doesn’t get out.”
Dougal listens gravely and again salutes.
“I’ve brought ye a message,”
he says. “We’ve just had a meetin’
and I’ve to report that ye’ve been unanimously
eleckit Chief Die-Hard. We’re a’
hopin’ ye’ll accept.”
“I accept,” Dickson replies.
“Proudly and gratefully I accept.”
The last scene is some days later,
in a certain southern suburb of Glasgow. Ulysses
has come back to Ithaca, and is sitting by his fireside,
waiting for the return of Penelope from the Neuk Hydropathic.
There is a chill in the air, so a fire is burning in
the grate, but the laden tea-table is bright with
the first blooms of lilac. Dickson, in a new
suit with a flower in his buttonhole, looks none the
worse for his travels, save that there is still sticking-plaster
on his deeply sunburnt brow. He waits impatiently
with his eye on the black marble timepiece, and he
fingers something in his pocket.
Presently the sound of wheels is heard,
and the pea-hen voice of Tibby announces the arrival
of Penelope. Dickson rushes to the door, and
at the threshold welcomes his wife with a resounding
kiss. He leads her into the parlour and settles
her in her own chair.
“My! but it’s nice to
be home again!” she says. “And everything
that comfortable. I’ve had a fine time,
but there’s no place like your own fireside.
You’re looking awful well, Dickson. But
losh! What have you been doing to your head?”
“Just a small tumble.
It’s very near mended already. Ay, I’ve
had a grand walking tour, but the weather was a wee
bit thrawn. It’s nice to see you back again,
Mamma. Now that I’m an idle man you and
me must take a lot of jaunts together.”
She beams on him as she stays herself
with Tibby’s scones, and when the meal is ended,
Dickson draws from his pocket a slim case. The
jewels have been restored to Saskia, but this is one
of her own which she has bestowed upon Dickson as
a parting memento. He opens the case and reveals
a necklet of emeralds, any one of which is worth half
the street.
“This is a present for you,” he says bashfully.
Mrs. McCunn’s eyes open wide.
“You’re far too kind,” she gasps.
“It must have cost an awful lot of money.”
“It didn’t cost me that much,” is
the truthful answer.
She fingers the trinket and then clasps
it round her neck, where the green depths of the stones
glow against the black satin of her bodice. Her
eyes are moist as she looks at him. “You’ve
been a kind man to me,” she says, and she kisses
him as she has not done since Janet’s death.
She stands up and admires the necklet
in the mirror. Romance once more, thinks Dickson.
That which has graced the slim throats of princesses
in far-away Courts now adorns an elderly matron in
a semi-detached villa; the jewels of the wild Nausicaa
have fallen to the housewife Penelope.
Mrs. McCunn preens herself before
the glass. “I call it very genteel,”
she says. “Real stylish. It might
be worn by a queen.”
“I wouldn’t say but it has,” says
Dickson.